Tuesday's Democratic Nomination For Governor In Ohio - Will It Be Rich Cordray or Dennis Kucinich?Rich Cordray was thought to be a shoo-in as the democratic nominee for governor. Then along came Dennis Kucinich. Now, these two well-known progressives are vying for Tuesday's nomination.

Rich Cordray has a 2-1 lead over Dennis Kucinich, but 41 percent of the likely Democratic primary voters say they still haven't made up their mind.
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Rich Cordray has a 2-1 lead over Dennis Kucinich, but 41 percent of the likely Democratic primary voters say they still haven't made up their mind.

M.L Schultze/WKSU

Rich Cordray steps into the Laborers Local 574 hall in central Ohio. The hall is small – a dot of blue voters in the sea of red that is rural Ohio. Cordray was expected to be the unbeatable candidate in Tuesday's Ohio Democratic gubernatorial primary.

The former head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has name recognition and Democratic street cred for once being dissed by President Trump.

But then came Dennis Kucinich, the late entry into the race. This former mayor, congressman and presidential candidate is a liberal firebrand — and now there is friction among Ohio Democrats.

In the hall, about 50 people nod and clap as Cordray talks about government working for people, tuition-free community college, and the charter school and payday lending scandals swirling around state Republicans.

But the first question he's asked has nothing to do with any of that. Through much of his career, Rich Cordray had an A+ rating from the National Rifle Association. Dan Giles, a voter from the audience, asks Cordray, what is he going to do about gun violence?

"We have a problem of gun violence in our society. I think any thinking person recognizes that, with the school shootings and the community shootings around the country," says Cordray. "We need to find practical steps that will reduce the violence and save lives."

Cordray supports the Second Amendment, but also universal background checks and bans on bump stocks and high-capacity magazines.

Giles leaves the meeting undecided. "I wanted to get something from the heart and I didn't hear that," he says.

Dennis Kucinich has been dogging Cordray on this issue for months, aided by a YouTube video of Cordray speaking to gun rights advocates in 2010, when he called guns not just a constitutional but a natural right.

Dennis Kucinich greets voters at the West Side Market in Cleveland. He surprised voters and his opponents with his late candidacy for governor.
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Dennis Kucinich greets voters at the West Side Market in Cleveland. He surprised voters and his opponents with his late candidacy for governor.

M.L Schultze/WKSU

Kucinich, in contrast, has an F rating from the NRA. "And I'm proud of it," he says. "It represents the fact that I'm politically independent."

He wants to ban assault-style weapons in a state that has loosened gun laws more than a dozen times. He's now 71, but still looks like the boy-mayor of Cleveland he was 40 years ago. A Baldwin Wallace University poll out less than a week before Election Day shows that 41 percent of Democratic voters still have not made up their mind.

Guns are not his only difference with Cordray. "On fracking, I think it has to be brought to an end," Kucinich says. "He does not. On legalizing marijuana, I think it's long past the time that be done. He does not. On the death penalty, I think it ought to be banned. He does not."

All of that aligns Kucinich with Sen. Bernie Sanders' wing of the Democratic party, but a number of Ohio Democratic insiders fear Kucinich would alienate independent voters who are crucial for a Democratic win in November. Liberal vanguard Sen. Elizabeth Warren is one of Cordray's biggest backers.

Both candidates are progressive, says Sarah Poggione, a political scientist at Ohio University, meaning the biggest difference between them for voters may actually be their personalities. Where Cordray is cerebral and detailed, Kucinich is "more fiery, a little bit less polished in some ways."

And Kucinich has come under attack for his stint as a Fox News analyst, his call for President Obama's impeachment and his visits with Syrian dictator Bashar al Assad — which he says were part of his effort to achieve world peace.

It's unclear how much any of that means to voters in a state struggling with an opioid crisis and uncertain economy. What is clear is that many voters are still looking for clues before Tuesday's election.